Former Dallas Morning News group of workers writer Olive Talley has had a pretty the journalism career. On April 28, she’s topping it off with the debut of her documentary, All Rise for the Good of the Children, as part of the USA Film Festival at the Angelika Film Center. The result of her 18-year involvement with the Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Development at TCU, the movie highlights an East Texas family court that successfully used the institute’s research to change how it dealt with families in crisis.
After getting her start in talk information radio in the late 1970s, Talley went to paintings for United Press International. Besides covering Space Shuttle launches in Cape Canaveral as one of 3 national space correspondents, she also had the dying row beat, interviewing inmates at Huntsville. (One changed into Ronald Clark O’Bryan, known as The Man Who Killed Halloween, who laced Pixy Stix with cyanide and killed his son for the coverage cash.) When UPI started to head below, she went to the Houston Chronicle, after which the Houston Post landed at the Dallas Morning News in 1986. She stayed there for nearly a decade before shifting to New York to turn out to be a producer for Diane Sawyer on ABC’s Primetime Live and then for Dateline NBC.
In 2001, she changed to working for Dateline on research into the abuses and deaths of youngsters from unconventional “holding treatment options.” “They were wrapping youngsters in blankets, and they were killing them,” Talley says. “They have been smothering them, doing what changed into then referred to as a re-birthing procedure. I was just appalled.” Someone directed her to TCU’s Institute of Child Development to see a different kind of therapy that turned into having high-quality effects.
“I went to a summertime camp, and I watched Karyn Purvis, who was then getting her Ph.D. And went on to lead the Institute — work with these kids who had been over the world adopted youngsters,” Talley says. “The parents had been like, ‘We’re at our wits’ quit. These youngsters are having meltdowns and are out of manipulating. We don’t know what to do.’ I wound up doing a documentary for Dateline about an own family in Saginaw, that’s a suburb of Fort Worth, and they had been about to relinquish custody of their adopted son from Romania, or at the least have him institutionalized due to the fact the circle of relatives becomes just disintegrating under all this violence and chaos. Well, we followed their development for 12 months as they went through diverse treatment plans.”
At first, Talley becomes intrigued, but is now not satisfied by using Purvis and her branch head, David Cross. They weren’t yet called experts in the area. “But I saw this intervention, and I noticed this child trade,” Talley says. “This one little woman from Russia — this beautiful, blonde, blue-eyed, fabulous little lady — all of a sudden, she erupts into this meltdown, and she’s crying and screaming and flailing. Karyn put her in prison. However, it’s referred to as a basket hold, in which you preserve their palms and maintain their feet from hitting you or hurting themselves. And she sat there for approximately an hour with this infant, softly talking to her. And I’m sitting there, just in tears, looking. What the hell is going on? What is inside this infant that would make her feel a lot of turmoil?
“Well, it turns out, the child had witnessed her little brother being killed with the aid of their mom in a swimming pool. And they had just announced in the camp that everybody had to get ready and pick up their things because they could be going to the swimming pool. So the mention of the swimming pool prompted the trauma that this little girl had suffered. Karyn, instinctively, knew there were a few traumas there. She didn’t realize at the time what had happened, but she knew that the kid was reacting to some annoying occasion. And I’m like, I don’t apprehend this. I’ve never visible a kid react like this. I have by no means seen anybody take care of a child like this. I turned, mesmerized.”






